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Wednesday, 25 May 2016

Senate Asks FG to Recover N42bn Waivers Granted Dangote, Bua, Others

The Senate on Tuesday asked the federal
government to recover N42 billion grants as import duty waivers to six
companies including Dangote Limited and BUA Sugar Refinery between 2013
and 2015.

The upper chamber also asked the federal
government to compel Olam International Limited, Popular Foods, a
subsidiary of Stallion Group, and Milan Group to pay the import duty
demand notice of N24 billion served on them by the Nigeria Customs
Service (NCS) for exceeding the quota granted to them on rice
importation during the period.

The Senate resolution was the fallout of
the adoption of the report of its ad hoc Committee on Import Duty
Waivers, Concessions and Grants which investigated the indiscriminate
use and abuse of waivers granted by the federal government to some
organisations.

Presenting the report, the committee’s
chairman, Senator Adamu Aliero, put the total amount to be recovered as
grants for rice importation at N10 billion.
He listed the organisations meant to repay the N10 billion rice waivers
and the respective amounts they should refund to include: Dangote
Limited (N1,031,038,848); Kersuk Farms (N1,927,800,000); BUA Group
(N3,704,126,328); Elephant Group (N1,501,627,680); Golden Penny
(N284,602,399.20); and Milan Group (N1,855,263,312).

He added that the sum of N31.7 billion,
representing 5 per cent import duty and another 45 per cent levy for
2013, as well as 5 per cent import duty and 65 per cent levy for
2014-2015 grants for the importation of raw sugar, should be recovered
from BUA Group for obtaining a waiver for the importation of raw sugar
without what he described as the backward integration policy for local
sugar production.

He also said Mediterranean Nigeria Limited should be made to pay
N82,101,866.10 as import duty for excess and under-invoicing 2,161,440
kilogramme of St. Louis cube sugar in June 2014.

In the same vein, the Senate resolved that the sum of N687,496,320,
which the committee described as an illegal amount for the transfer of
100,000 metric tonnes of rice by JNI to Elephant Group, should be
recovered.

It also said Elephant Group and
officials, who were involved in the transaction, should be sanctioned
for alleged economic sabotage, noting that the waiver was offered as
charity grants and not for commercial purpose, because the company only
donated foodstuffs to secure the offer.

The Senate also resolved that firms,
which were illegally granted customs duty waivers and concessions
through flagrant abuse of executive powers, must be made to refund such
losses, as it described the amount as a huge loss of revenue to the
federation account. It also said the companies should be sanctioned for
economic sabotage.
According to the committee, organisations such as Mc Sally Investment
Limited, which it said was not a player in the sector, got a waiver and
imported 250,000 metric tonnes of vegetable oil, adding that it was
detrimental to the economy.

In the same vein, the Senate said
Elephant Group should be sanctioned for securing a waiver and importing
100,000 metric tonnes of parboiled rice without being a rice farmer or
miller as provided for in the National Rice Policy.

The Senate called on the federal
government to ensure that the grant of multiple incentives in the form
of multiple duty waivers, concessions, pioneer incentives and grants at
the same time to the same beneficiaries should be stopped henceforth.
It also asked the NCS to accept only bank indemnities and not corporate
indemnities to avoid future loss of revenue to the government.

It advised the federal government to as a
matter of urgency restructure and streamline the functions and
responsibilities of the Budget Office of the Federation with a view to
preventing abuses and excesses in support of duty waivers, concessions
and grants.

It also said in line with international
best practices, the federal government should take appropriate steps to
evolve a clear-cut policy on import duty waivers, concessions and
transparent grants.

The Senate further held that federal and state governments’ contractors
should no longer enjoy import duty waivers, just as it said
institutional weakness in the system should be addressed through the
review of all relevant laws such as Customs and Excise Management Act
and Nigeria Export Promotion Council Act, among others.

$2.9bn Lost Annually to Tax Waivers

Just as the Senate ad hoc committee
presented its report, the House of Representatives yesterday also
disclosed that Nigeria currently loses about $2.9 billion annually to
indiscriminate tax waivers, with little evidence that the tax incentives
have increased investments in the country.

The policy of tax incentives and waivers,
the House recalled, was originally designed to attract genuine
investments, particularly foreign investors who were expected to bring
in capital to support economic development and create employment. The
policy has however been abused, the House said.
The House therefore directed its Committees on Finance and Public
Accounts to review the policy, which is implemented by the Ministry of
Finance, with a view to abolishing unproductive incentives.

The resolution of the House followed a
motion sponsored by Hon. Kehinde Odeneye (Ogun APC), who emphasised that
conditions for tax incentives should be clearly spelt out and directed
at achieving specific social and economic objectives.
Nigeria receives an average of $6 billion annually, Odeneye said, citing
figures from the Nigeria Investment Promotion Council (NIPC).

Hon. Herman Hembe (Benue APC) also
lamented that the policy was abused to the extent that waivers were
granted to oil exploration companies.
He accused the Ministry of Finance of disregarding the recommendations on eligibility and duration of tax waivers.

Hon. Nnenna Ukeje (Abia PDP) however
noted that the issue of tax waivers could not be handled by a motion but
by a bill, which has the potential of becoming a law.
The majority leader, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, advocated that the
investigation should include waivers granted to manufacturers and
importers, not just foreign investors.
“In Nigeria, tax waivers are the rule rather than the exception,” Gbajabiamila said.
The joint committee is expected to submit its report in four weeks.